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In this post, Kelsey Piper argues that one of AI’s most prominent critics is making a weaker case than he used to: as AI tools have improved, adoption has grown, and costs have fallen, the serious skeptical argument has shifted from “AI has no value” to harder questions about profitability, capital expenditure, and whether current revenue can justify the build-out. It’s a sharp but spoiler-free critique of bad AI skepticism, and a call for better, more precise scrutiny of an industry that still badly needs it.
* 00:00 - Introduction
* 07:27 - Maybe everything is a lie?
* 14:54 - We’re not headed for March 2000
https://open.substack.com/pub/theargument/p/ais-biggest-critic-has-lost-the-plot?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=web
By Readings of great articles in AI voices5
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In this post, Kelsey Piper argues that one of AI’s most prominent critics is making a weaker case than he used to: as AI tools have improved, adoption has grown, and costs have fallen, the serious skeptical argument has shifted from “AI has no value” to harder questions about profitability, capital expenditure, and whether current revenue can justify the build-out. It’s a sharp but spoiler-free critique of bad AI skepticism, and a call for better, more precise scrutiny of an industry that still badly needs it.
* 00:00 - Introduction
* 07:27 - Maybe everything is a lie?
* 14:54 - We’re not headed for March 2000
https://open.substack.com/pub/theargument/p/ais-biggest-critic-has-lost-the-plot?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=web

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